Actionable-object controller and data-entry attachment for touchscreen-based electronics

ABSTRACT

A touchscreen-controller and data-entry ensemble are attached conterminously or proximately to a touchscreen device. A touchscreen-controller attachment device has one or more input ends and one or more output ends. The input and output ends may be opposite ends of unitary elements and/or may be remote from one another and connected by wire or wirelessly. Each input end of a unitary conductive element is connected to a respective output end and the plurality of output ends, residing in an attachment base, are in a position of contact with or in close proximity to the soft buttons, keys or controller(s) of a touchscreen. The output ends thus activate the touchscreen when the input ends are manipulated. A base maintains the input and/or output ends in fixed position during use. Input and output elements can be spring-mounted. New controllers offer the user haptic ability.

RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No.13/005,315, filed Jan. 12, 2011, which claims full benefits ofprovisional applications 61/282,692 and 61/344,158; filed under the sameinventor on Mar. 18, 2010 and Jun. 2, 2010, respectively; all theseapplications are incorporated by reference herein, in their entirety,for all purposes.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention targets the technical field of touchscreen-basedelectronics. Touchscreen-based electronics, in both a portable andstationary environment, can include a wide array of devices such as:personal and notebook computers, netbooks, ATMs, POS or informationkiosks, ticket-dispensing machines, portable media players, personaldigital assistants, monitors, televisions, tablets, i-devices and MobileInternet Devices or MIDs such as multi-media and Internet-enabled smartphones; although this list is not intended to be exhaustive.Touchscreens allow users of these devices to input commands, engage indata entry or otherwise control an actionable object or on-screengraphic through touch—typically by finger, thumb or stylus contact. Thetouchscreen senses the coordinates of the “touch,” through any of thevarying means of touchscreen-based technologies, including, but notsuggestive of limitation to, those that are capacitive-and-resistivegoverned. The coordinate data registered via “touch-sensing” can then berelayed to the device's controller (or processor) for processing and canfurther be utilized by software associated with applications running onan electronic-touchscreen to initiate a desired action.

Coordinate-data determination at the point of contact, of course, istechnology specific. With resistive touchscreen technologies, forexample, the touchscreen panel is comprised of several layers; notablytwo electrically-conductive membranes that are typically separated by anextremely thin non-conductive gap. When pressure is applied to theflexible topmost layer, contact is made with its conductive pairing,effectively completing “the circuit” at the point of contact and thus,engaging the hardware for specific coordinate-data determination andrelated processing.

In a capacitive-sensor system, the touchscreen panel, typically glasscoated with a material such as indium tin oxide to enhance conductivityacross a sensor device, acts as a sensor. In preamble, a biologicalproperty of the human body is its ability to carry and store anelectrical charge—a case in reference being the electrons contained inyour finger. The capacitive-sensor system utilizes a conductive input,usually a user's finger, to register touch and is ideally capable ofcollectively tracking 10 or more fingers concurrently. Finger contactwith the capacitive-based touchscreen panel alters the electrostaticfield, which is then interpreted by the processor and device's software,translating this touch into a gesture or command. Respective capacitivetouchscreens feature electrostatic-field monitoring circuitry, withpoints that can be arranged in the form of a grid. Each point on thegrid is designed to register changes in electrostatic fields and processthem accordingly, making multi-touch and multi-gestures possible.

Input-driven software includes touch-requisite applications such asthose fueling an ever-growing list of smart-phone “apps”. Despite mobileapps being wildly popular, a direct consequence of the pocket-sizedfootprint of portable gadgets may be a user experience that is greatlyattenuated by significant limitations of control of an actionable objector “an on-screen graphic”. Contributing factors may include the device'ssmall screen size and tiny on-screen control-keys, the size andsensitivity of the positioning of a user's fingers, the diversity andchanging landscape of the soft keys and the unnatural fit for many ofcontrolling or navigating an actionable object whilst thetouchscreen-enabled hardware is concurrently grasped. In the case ofgaming applications on portable hardware, where control of an actionableobject or player for a particular gaming title becomes more intricate,these limitations of control can be exacerbated.

The imprecise nature of traditional touchscreen controllers of anactionable object may be especially apparent when console-born gamingtitles are adapted to the small screen (pocket gaming), and controllersand control efficacy between both platforms can be compared. Even simpleleft, right, upward and downward navigation that is engaged by atouchscreen's soft buttons or keys, in a traditional manner, can provedifficult to execute. Peer-based, business or SMS (Short MessageService) texting in data-entry applications, additionally, can sufferfrom said tiny portable footprint, where the “hunt and peck”, forexample, may not always be as productive as first intended. With one'sfinger size often bigger than the soft keys or buttons it was designedfor, this can lend itself to accidental “key bleed” between neighbouringkeys—that is, with neighbouring keys accidentally being touched indata-entry execution over the intended ones.

Circumstances may arise where it would be desirable to operate the softbuttons displayed on the touchscreen from a distance or using analternate input device; in both a portable and stationary(notwithstanding its larger form factor) environment.

SUMMARY

Embodiments herein are directed to systems, devices and methods forimproving the control performance and data-entry functionality of softbuttons or soft keys displayed on congruous touchscreens; when used instationary and portable devices.

In some embodiments, a touchscreen-controller attachment is attachedconterminously or proximately to a touchscreen. Thetouchscreen-controller attachment provides a physical interface for atouchscreen controller displayed as soft keys on a touchscreen.

A disclosed touchscreen-controller attachment device has one or moreinput ends and one or more output ends. The input and output ends bothserve as conductive elements. Each input end is connected to arespective output end and the output ends, residing in an attachmentbase, are configured to be respectively affixed, in a position ofcontact with or in close proximity to, the soft buttons, keys orcontroller(s) of a touchscreen. The output ends are thus configured toactivate the touchscreen when one or more of the input ends ismanipulated. The base can include a plurality of channels, with each ofthe plurality of channels designed to house either a fixed or removableoutput end. Unlike resistive touchscreens that sense pressure on atouchscreen from an output end regardless of the presence of anelectrical signal, traditional capacitive touchscreens require aconductive path to remain present between the input and output end.

In some unitary element embodiments, there may be at least one springchamber extending through a controller base channel; said channel orchamber collectively housing both the unitary element and a coil spring.As the input end of a housed (by a coil wrap) unitary element ismanipulated, the output end is engaged contactually to a touchscreen. Insaid scenario, both the spring and output end assume a position of restupon deapplication of the input end of a unitary element. Each pair ofinput and output ends are opposite ends of a unitary element and serveto complete a conductive path in the spirit and scope of this discourse.

Varying the contactual alignment of the output ends with thesoft-buttons, for instance at the soft-button's outermost edges, allowsfor physical expansion of the size of the tactile controller from thefixed dimensions of the soft-button controller, where coveted.

In some embodiments, a touchscreen-controller assembly provides aninterface between a touchscreen controller displayed as soft keys on aportable-or-stationary device's touchscreen and a physical controllerdevice that is designed for remote operation. That is, anactionable-object controller device that operates remotely from theportable or stationary device. Remote operation is delineated in bothwired and wireless expressions.

According to a remote embodiment, the input ends are remote from theoutput ends and are connected to the output ends by wire or wirelessly.Components may include a remote, hand-controller base, housing one ormore input ends, a transceiver that is communicativelycoupled—wirelessly—with a remote, hand-controller base, and at least oneconductive filament; the at least one conductive filament (housed in aspecially insulated cable) having a first end and a second end, wherethe first end is communicatively coupled with the transceiver, andwherein the second end is communicatively coupled with one of the outputends. Some remote embodiments, such as those that are transceiverless,may also see at least one conductive filament, the at least oneconductive filament (housed in a specially insulated cable) having afirst end and a second end, where the first end is communicativelycoupled to one of the input ends of a remote, hand-controller base, andthe second end is communicatively coupled to one of the output ends.

In haptic embodiments, a hand-gripped controller—containing at least oneor more input ends—also houses at least one vibration motor; whereas avibration motor is engaged according to directives administered throughhaptic association with a user device. Haptic association may be marriedto a transceiver or haptic directives can be interpreted directly by aspecially-designed, independent hand-gripped controller. Both wired andwireless mediums can be utilized to complete the necessary conductivepath of a unitary element, in the spirit and scope of this discourse.

According to an embodiment, a data-entry attachment provides aninterface between data-entry-based soft keys, including, but not limitedto, symbols, numbers, alphabetic characters, graphics; also navigation,function, toggle and modifier keys (such as Ctrl, Shift, Alt, and soforth) and a physical data-entry controller (such as a keyboard, keypador similar data-entry device), located remotely from the portable orstationary device.

According to an embodiment, a data-entry attachment device includes aplurality of output elements and a plurality of input keys, each inputkey communicatively coupled to at least one of the plurality of outputelements via wires or wirelessly. The plurality of output elements areaffixable to the touchscreen of a user device. The output elements areconductive elements and the input keys are conductive keys, and eachinput key is communicatively coupled, respectively, to at least one ofthe plurality of output elements via one or more conductive wires. Aspecially designed transceiver matrix would allow for wireless coupling.In toggle mode, at least one of the output elements is communicativelycoupled with at least two input keys, whereby activation of either inputkey activates the coupled output element.

According to an embodiment, a suspension device with a grip-friendlystead is introduced. The suspension device is adapted to house atouchscreen device, an adjustable stem member having a first end and asecond end, and at least one slotted groove that is adapted to house thefirst end of the adjustable stem member; the second end beingattachable—or seeing fixed attachment—to an attachable-controllerdevice; whereas said attachable-controller device (with housedconductive elements) seeks direct attachment to the touchscreen at itsbase, in the spirit and scope of this discourse. The suspension devicemay be constructed to provide for an attachment plurality; an embodimentis further described where the attachment device is at least one of abase and a magnification device, and whereas the suspension deviceincludes at least one handle component and the at least one handle iscontoured to a user's hand.

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a top view of a soft-key or soft-button touchscreen controller(graphically-based) and a controllable or actionable object on atouchscreen, according to prior art.

FIG. 2A illustrates a touchscreen-controller attachment, according to anembodiment.

FIG. 2B illustrates a touchscreen-controller attachment conductivelyaffixed to the soft keys or soft buttons of a touchscreen, according toan embodiment.

FIG. 3A illustrates an unattached controller assembly, designed forremote operation, according to an embodiment.

FIG. 3B illustrates a controller assembly designed for remote operation;conductively married by attachment to the soft buttons or keys of atouchscreen, according to an embodiment. (See also FIGS. 10A, 10B)

FIG. 4A illustrates a simplified, cross-sectioned side view of anattachable-controller assembly, as affixed, respectively, to thetouchscreen, with the correlative conductive elements in constantcontact with the touchscreen, according to an embodiment.

FIG. 4B illustrates a simplified, cross-sectioned side view of anattachable-controller assembly, as affixed, respectively, to thetouchscreen, with the correlative conductive elements disengaged fromthe touchscreen at rest, according to an embodiment.

FIG. 5 illustrates a cross-sectional view of a touchscreen-controllerattachment, with a single, spring-mounted conductive element, accordingto an embodiment.

FIG. 6 illustrates a touchscreen-controller attachment, borrowing inexpression from a traditional joystick controller, primarily through itsshaft design and curvilineal conductive top, according to an embodiment.

FIG. 7 is yet another embodiment of the touchscreen-controllerattachment, featuring a customizable navigation-control system,according to an embodiment.

FIG. 8A illustrates a user-device suspension apparatus, according to anembodiment.

FIG. 8B is a cross-sectional view illustrating the elements of acontroller attachment as it is attached to, through an adjustable stem,a receptive suspension device, according to an embodiment.

FIG. 9 illustrates a touchscreen-controller assembly designed for remoteoperation; with a wireless component, according to an embodiment.

FIGS. 10A and 10B illustrate a touchscreen-controller assembly, designedfor remote operation, according to an embodiment.

FIG. 11 illustrates a means of expanding the size of thetouchscreen-controller attachment, against a fixed set of soft buttons,according to an embodiment.

FIG. 12 is a listing diagram of components related to a data-entryensemble; including a touchscreen-controller attachmentmatrix—comprising a plurality of conductive elements; a receptivekeyboard, keypad or data-entry device designed to engage soft data-entryor soft buttons and a hardware touchscreen; according to an embodiment.

FIG. 13 is an associative diagram of the touchscreen-controllerattachment matrix and its correct attachment sequence to the graphicalor touchscreen-based soft buttons or data-entry buttons at the matrix'sface 50-F and its integration with the conductive keys (partiallyillustrated for clarity using only two conductive keys or the actionableletters “A” and “B”) of a receptive keyboard, keypad or data-entrydevice, via extension from the matrix's back.

FIG. 14 is an illustration of an embodiment suggesting the premise of“toggle-mode”, in the spirit and scope of this discourse.

FIG. 15 is an illustration of a plurality of various character orkeyboard sets that are linked in a toggle, the premise of “toggle” beingrequisite for devices subject to space limitations.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Embodiments herein are directed to systems, devices and methods forimproving input function of soft-button controllers (graphicalrepresentations that are engaged by—or respond to—the control input of afinger in order to carry out a function) and/or any respective soft keyor keys situated on a capacitive touchscreen, particularly; in bothstationary and portable devices. The disclosures herein are provided tolend instance to the operation and methodology of the variousembodiments and are neither intended to suggest limitation in breadth orscope nor to suggest limitation to the claims appended hereto.Furthermore, such exemplary embodiments may be applicable to allsuitable touchscreen-hardware platforms (tablets, smart phones,monitors, televisions, point-of-display, etceteras) and can also includeall suitable touchscreen technologies, beyond capacitive and capacitancegoverned, such as those inclined with resistive touchscreens that, too,respond to touch input, albeit with its own peculiarities related to thetechnology. Those skilled in the art will understand and appreciate theactuality of variations, combinations and equivalents of the specificembodiments, methods and examples listed herein.

While a functional element may be illustrated as being located within aparticular structure, other locations of the functional element arepossible. Further, the description of an embodiment and the orientationand layout of an element in a drawing are for illustrative purposes onlyand are not suggestive of limitation.

In the description that follows, the term “portable device” encompassesportable media players, personal digital assistants, laptop computers,tablets, i-devices and multimedia and Internet-enabled smart phones,amongst others similarly situated.

In the description that follows, the term “stationary device”encompasses a device that is generally operated in a fixed location. Astationary device may be movable or transportable, but is generally notoperated while in transit.

Whilst embodiments may be illustrated using portable devices, theparticularity of these embodiments are not limited to application ofportable devices and may instead be applied to stationary devices. Forpurposes of the discussion that follows, the term “user device”encompasses both portable and stationary devices.

In the discourse that follows, the terms “soft button” or “soft keys”encompass a graphical representation of a D-pad (directional pad) orgamepad, a physical button, a switch, a pointer, an alphanumeric key,data-entry key or any input-seeking graphical representation on atouchscreen; that may be engaged by a user through touch in order toenter a command, indicate a selection, input data or engage or controlan actionable object on the touchscreen. Touch gestures are registeredby the touchscreen through interpretation by a processor; incollaboration with the respective software running on the user device.

In the description that follows, the term “attachment” generally refersto a device or assembly that is placed in contact with the soft-buttonson a touchscreen for purposes of engaging control of an actionableobject or series of objects, such as those that may be present ingaming, enterprise, office suites, text or data-entry, media, graphicsand presentation applications, although these applications are notsuggestive of limitation. In certain scenarios, soft-button contactthrough attachment is not automatic and requires prior manipulation ofusually proximal conductive elements for engagement. An attachment maybe adapted for both wired and wireless expressions.

In the description that follows, the term “remote operation” refers to aphysical controller assembly, interface or device that is intended to beoperated remotely from the touchscreen.

Embodiments of the present invention are described in more detail below,under dissertation of introduced Figures, with reference to theaccompanying drawings.

Actionable-Object Controller Attachment

FIG. 1 illustrates a top view of a soft-key or soft-button controllerand an actionable or controllable object on a touchscreen, according toprior art.

A user device 5 utilizes a touchscreen 10. An application running on theuser device 5 displays soft buttons 20 that are designed to effectcontrol an actionable object 15. The actionable object 15 is illustratedas a graphic on the touchscreen 10 and may be a player, character,numerical or alphabetic rendering, cursor, pointer, icon or any othergraphical representation of an application and/or a software programelement that is to be controlled by the soft buttons 20. In a data-entrysense, the term actionable object 15 can be used interchangeably withthe soft-buttons 20 themselves. Such is the case when a soft-button, forinstance, comprises an alphanumeric character. In this way, as asoft-button is touch engaged, it can directly translate the gesture intouser input in a data-entry application.

As noted previously, due to a user device's 5 potentially small-screensize and concomitant tiny on-screen soft buttons 20, significantlimitations of control can be a direct consequence of a small footprint;making precise or intended control of the actionable object 15 difficultin a native, attachmentless state.

FIG. 2A illustrates a touchscreen-controller attachment 102, accordingto an embodiment. FIG. 2B illustrates a touchscreen-controllerattachment 102 with the respective conductive elements 106 conductivelyaffixed to the soft keys or soft buttons 20 of a touchscreen 10,according to an embodiment. Some elements of FIG. 2A may not bereproduced in FIG. 2B since contactual overlay is the elementary focus.

A touchscreen-controller attachment 102 comprises an attachment base 104containing a conductive element 106 or plurality of conductive elements106. The conductive elements 106 may be made of anyelectrically-conductive material or materials, including but not limitedto, conductive polymers such as polyaniline, conductive gels, conductiveliquids, conductive wire, any material that is conductively (exhibitingconductivity) coated—such as with the use of treated and/or dipped foam,thread, or fibers—used alone, in filler compositions or in a series ofconductive combinations, as aptly conjoined. The material of theconductive elements 106 are preferably chosen and/or shielded to benon-abrasive to the touchscreen 10.

Excluding the housed conductive elements 106, the touchscreen-controllerattachment 102 is comprised of a non-conductive material or materials,such as plastic or rubber. The back, screen or “attachment” side of thetouchscreen-controller attachment 102 is designed to be affixed to thetouchscreen 10, with the touchscreen-controller attachment's 102opposing face, (the actuating or “user” side) accessible by a user ofthe user device 5. The conductive elements 106 are designed for contactwith the soft buttons 20 (see FIG. 1 and FIG. 2B) from the attachmentside and see the element's conductive path extended, respectively, to anaccessible position of touch input on the actuating or “user” side ofthe user device 5.

The attachment base 104 may be affixed to the touchscreen 10 by suction,static, removable adhesive backing or any other appropriate means. Aremoval tab 108 provides for removal of the attachment base 104 from thetouchscreen 10.

As illustrated in FIG. 2B, the touchscreen-controller attachment 102 isattached in a manner such that the conductive elements 106 are incontactual and respective alignment with the soft buttons 20 displayedon the touchscreen 10. This alignment permits the capacitive load orcapacitance stored, for example, in the user's finger (which is also anelectrical conductor) to be conveyed through the conductive elements 106and thus, alter the amount of charge at the corresponding point oftouchscreen 10 contact, just as if the user was directly touching thesoft-buttons 20 of a touchscreen 10 with finger input. Said contact maythen be interpreted by both the processor and software of the device andrelayed, accordingly, to engage an actionable object 15. A conductivepath thus “extends” the soft buttons 20 of the touchscreen 10 to theentirety of the conductive elements 106. The touchscreen-controllerattachment 102 provides for refined control of the controllable oractionable object 15.

In contrast with direct finger contact with the soft buttons 20,however, the touchscreen-controller attachment 102 provides for aphysical interface—that can be scalable—that assists the user in tactilereference of a touchscreen's 10 “button geography”. Such tactilereference could prove quite advantageous in yielding more precisecontrol, comfort, convenience and a greater parallel to familiarity ofhabit with an interface that may borrow certain physical expression orexpressions from traditional control structures of video-game consoles,amongst other advantages. The touchscreen-controller attachment 102, intactile elaboration, provides a physical reference point that reduces auser's need for visual confirmation of the location of the soft buttons20. With traditional, standalone soft-button controllers in action, as acase in point, visual confirmation may be required when a user's fingerhas slipped from the soft buttons 20 and a loss in finger orientationensues.

The touchscreen-controller attachment 102 is sufficiently wide and longto ensure that the soft-buttons 20 are aligned with the conductiveelements 106, but not overly wide and long to otherwise block orencroach germane domain of the actual screen as an application oractionable element is being rendered. Graphical encroachment beyond thesoft-buttons 20 may occur, when such encroachment is not deemedcritically invasive to the application. The conductive elements 106 areproportionate to the soft buttons 20 on the touchscreen 10 and also therespective hardware ensemble on which it is intended to operate and sitcontactually affixed to the intended soft button and not an unintendedplurality, unless specifically designed for such a purpose.

While a single touchscreen-controller attachment 102 is illustrated inFIG. 2B, this is not suggestive of quantitative limitation. In anembodiment, a plurality of touchscreen-controller attachments of varyingsizes, shapes, configurations and component dimensions may besimultaneously affixed to a touchscreen 10, in the spirit and scope ofthis discourse, should control scenarios of an actionable object 15 orobjects require it.

FIG. 3A illustrates an unattached touchscreen-controller assembly,designed for remote operation, according to an embodiment.

A remote actionable-object controller assembly 302 comprises a remoteactionable-object controller interface 304, connecting cable 308 and aplurality of conductive elements 310 and 306; each of the conductiveelements 310 is individually attached, ensuring a chain-of-conductivityor conductive path remains present, to a conductive extension such as awire filament. The connecting cable 308 collectively houses the attachedwire filaments for each of the conductive elements 310, with care toensure each individual wire is properly insulated from each other toprevent conductive “bleed-through” between the competing filaments(subject to contact) housed in the connecting cable 308.

Reciprocally, each of the conductive elements 306 in the remoteactionable-object controller interface 304, is individually attached,ensuring a conductive path remains present, to the opposite end of therespective wire filament originally extended from a conductive element310 and described above. Thus, a conductive path remains throughout therespectively tethered conductive elements 306 and 310 via a wirefilament connection.

The conductive elements 306 and 310 may be made of anyelectrically-conductive material or combination of conductive materials,including but not limited to, conducting polymers such as polyaniline,conductive gels, conductive liquids, conductive inks, conductive wireand/or any material that is conductively (exhibiting conductivity)dipped and/or coated—such as with the use of treated foam, thread, orfibers—used alone, in filler compositions or in a series of conductivecombinations, as aptly conjoined to ensure a proper conductive pathremains present. Excluding the housed conductive elements 306, theremote actionable-object controller interface 304 is constructed of anon-conductive material, such as plastic or rubber.

A substantial length of each wire filament remains housed in theconnecting cable 308; the exception being the attachable ends of a wirefilament, thus helping promote attachment and attachment flexibility.The conductive element 310 is married to the contact base 312 by anymeans appropriate, with care to ensure a proper conductive path to thetouchscreen 10 remains throughout. The contact base 312, containingeither a conductive component or constructed from a conductive materialin its entirety, is designed to sit conductively affixed to the softbuttons 20 (not illustrated).

FIG. 3B illustrates the touchscreen-controller assembly 302 outlined inFIG. 3A, delineating how it is conductively married—by attachment—to therespective soft buttons 20 of a touchscreen 10; thus permitting remoteoperation, according to an embodiment.

Each conductive element 306 of the remote actionable-object controllerinterface 304 is assigned to a correlative soft button 20. For instance,according to position, the top conductive element 306 on the remoteactionable-object controller interface 304, will see the conductive pathcompleted when it is positioned in contact with the top soft button 20.The conductive element corresponding to the right-most conductiveelement 306 sees its conductive path extended to the right-most softbutton 20, and so on, until each respective soft button 20 is properlyaccounted for and properly synchronized for intended navigation.

Each conductive element 310 is proportionate to the touchscreen 10environment in which it is intended to operate. Each conductive element310 is sized with care to ensure each does not block or encroach germanedomain of the actual screen as the application is being rendered and/orunintentionally overlap a plurality of soft buttons 20, upon attachmentto its correlative counterpart. One or more of the conductive elements310 may be transparent or translucent, minimizing any loss of view dueto placement of the conductive elements. Colour coding may be used tosimplify deployment of the controller assembly, amongst other means.

Citing an example of a capacitive touchscreen 10, two electricallyconductive objects, in this case a user's finger and the metalelectrodes underneath the surface of a capacitive touchscreen, arebrought in close proximity—without actually touching. When a user'sfinger contacts the glass of a specially-equipped touchscreen 10, a tinyinstance of capacitance is created between these two electricallyconductive objects. This instance of capacitance is cooperativelyinterpreted by the processor and software running on the user device 5,thereby translating this touch into directives; such as when attemptingcontrol of an actionable object 15. Touching the conductive elements 306of the remote actionable-object controller interface 304, is detected bythe touchscreen 10 in the same way as directly touching the soft buttons20 on the touchscreen 10 itself, making remote operation from acapacitive-touchscreen device possible through extension of theconductive path.

Although not illustrated, the remote actionable-object controllerassembly 302 can comprise a current-boosting device that is designed to,for example, intercept, then boost the induced capacitance engaged byfinger contact with the conductive elements 306, before it is relayed tothe touchscreen 10 to complete the conductive path. Such use of anamplifier device may be necessary under certain remote-operatingscenarios.

Furthermore, a haptic embodiment marrying an adapted remoteactionable-object controller interface 304 with an actuator, such as asingle or series of vibratory motors and a vibration-coupling device, ina hand-held device to form a haptic controller—also not illustrated—ispresented. The haptic controller provides force or tactile feedback to auser, commonly in the form of a vibration reflex to touch.Vibration-feedback is dependent on governing software, such as with thegame play or activity of compatible-gaming titles relaying hapticdirectives from the user device 5 to a haptic controller. In a gameenvironment, force feedback can be used to register events like bumps,crashes and player damage. A vibration-coupling device acts as anintermediary relay to the vibratory motors of a haptic controller, afterfirst receiving “haptic” or signal directives from the user device 5, inone haptic embodiment, or alternatively, a separateintermediary-transceiving device (See FIG. 9 for related discussion) mayact as the synchronizing relay agent of haptic directives from a userdevice 5 to a haptic controller.

Components involved in the relay of haptic directives can be suitablyequipped for a full wireless complement, although this does not precludeuse of a “wired” constituent and/or substitute. For instance, a hapticcontroller with innate conductive elements 306 designed to capacitivelyengage control of an actionable object 15, in the spirit and scope ofthis discourse, can see a conductive path to a touchscreen 5 completedthrough use of a wire filament.

The haptic controller may be powered by a controller battery orplurality of batteries, a power receptacle and/or any other suitablepower source. Dimensions of this embodiment are proportionate in size tothe hardware in which it is linked. Although haptic feedback seeks totake advantage of a user's sense of touch, this embodiment is notsuggestive of limitation in any propensity and seeks to wholly embracethe future of all sensory-involvement devices, including those beyondthe sense of touch. Modifications to this embodiment will also occur ashaptic technology evolves and a new wave of highly-sophisticated hapticinterfaces surface, such as with the possible inclusions of hapticradar, haptic teloperation, force-feedback RFID and virtual drums andwith nano-technology interfaces.

The conductive elements 106 illustrated in FIGS. 2A and 2B and aselements 306 and 310 in FIGS. 3A and 3B, and throughout this discourse,may be formed from an absorbent material, shaped to a desired dimension,which is then dipped in a conductive liquid, such as water or a salinesolution and packaged in an airtight container (sometimes referred toherein as a “cocoon”). Said container may be fabricated from a thin,flexible plastic material to prevent evaporation of the electricalconductor. The plastic used in this “cocoon” is sufficiently thin toensure a conductive path remains amongst the conductive elements 106,306, 310 and the respective soft buttons 20. The absorbent materialselected for the conductive elements 106, 306, 310 may be soft andcompressive in nature, as to simulate the feel and physical expressionof “button-pressing” of larger, console-based game controllers. Thecocoon may also be filled exclusively with a conducting liquid, amongsta broad scope of alternative deployments, to aptly fulfil requirementsof a conductive path.

FIG. 4A illustrates a simplified, cross-sectioned side view of certaincomponents of a touchscreen-controller attachment 102 (See FIGS. 2A, 2Band related discussions), as affixed, respectively, to the touchscreen10; with the correlative conductive elements 106 sitting in a positionof constant contact with the touchscreen 10 and its rendered softnavigator buttons 20, according to an embodiment. To engage controlfunctionality a person must simply touch the conductive elements 106using the control input of a finger.

FIG. 4B illustrates a simplified, cross-sectioned side view of certaincomponents of an alternate implementation of a touchscreen-controllerattachment 102 (See FIGS. 4A), as affixed, respectively, to thetouchscreen 10. In contrast to FIG. 4A, the correlative conductiveelements 106 are disengaged from the touchscreen 10 at rest, accordingto an embodiment. To engage control functionality of a capacitivetouchscreen under this system, the user employs the control input of afinger or thumb to both touch and concurrently depress the conductiveelements 106 until the bottom surface of the conductive elements 106make contact with the touch-sensitive soft buttons 20. The amount ofpressure that is required to actuate the conductive element 106 to astate of contact with the touchscreen 10 can depend on the flexibilityof the attachment base 404 and the distance between a conductive element106 at rest and the touchscreen 10, among other factors. Once fingerpressure is removed from the conductive element 106, the conductiveelement 106 will ideally revert back to its original position of rest(in non-contact mode). A spring-mounted conductive element can also beimplemented for such reversion. (See FIG. 5)

This resulting range of motion helps more closely simulate the buttonbehavior of buttons found on the traditional game controllers, game padsand/or other such control or navigation devices of gaming consoles.Aside from migration to more “button-like” action, this system may helpprevent unintentional “button bleed” that can arise from such scenariosas slippage and/or incidental finger contact with competing conductiveelements 106, since the user must not only contact, but also depress theconductive elements 106 to a degree of touchscreen 10 contact to beengaged. This design, for instance, may prove useful for soft-button 20controller renderings where spacing between the set of independentbuttons is diminutive.

The conductive elements 106 are proportionate in size to the hardware inwhich it is intended to operate and care is directed to ensuredimensions of the conductive elements 106 are not excessive. Overly longconductive elements 106, for example, can help create undue stress orpressure on the naturally fragile touchscreen 10 glass when firm,downward finger pressure is applied by the user. To help safeguard thetouchscreen 10, a range-restrictive shield that surrounds the protrudingconductive elements 106 at the position of user input, among othermeans, can be applied. This range-restrictive shield is a physicalbarrier that prevents the conductive elements 106 from pressing too hardagainst the surface of touchscreen 10 and damaging it, and may besimilar to a backstop 14 shown in FIG. 5.

FIG. 5 illustrates a cross-sectional view of a touchscreen-controllerattachment 102, featuring a single, spring-mounted conductive element,according to an embodiment. A cylindrically-tethered compression spring502 resides in a spring chamber 504 located in the attachment base 520.The cylindrically-tethered compression spring 502 may embrace asubstantial length of the conductive elements 106, with an exceptionbeing the top and bottom regions of the conductive elements 106 that areallowed to sit free from the coil wrap of the compression spring 502.The design impetus being conducive to permitting a fluency of motion forthe bottom region 510 of the conductive element 106 in making contactwith the touchscreen 10—when the upper region 512 of the conductiveelement 106 is depressed—without risk of harming the surface of thetouchscreen 10 from coil abrasion. The cylindrically-tetheredcompression spring 502 returns to its original position of rest when thedownward pressure is removed.

The compression spring 502 is secured by a backstop 514 near the bottomof a spring chamber 504. The backstop 514 may be a circular lip thatextends slightly beyond the circumference of the spring for properanchoring and is not excessively wide that it interferes with themovement of the conductive element 106. The conductive element 106 maybe of varying heights and dimensions; the determinants of which can bedictated by criteria such as the size of the touchscreen-controllerattachment 10 and the presented touchscreen 10 and the soft buttons 20.The diameter of the upper region 512 of the conductive element 106protruding beyond the coil wrap, may be fashioned wider (notillustrated) than the portion that passes through the compression spring502, if warranted, for improved contact with the tip of a finger orthumb.

FIG. 6 illustrates a touchscreen-controller attachment 602, borrowing incertain characteristical expressions from a traditional joystickcontroller, such as through its shaft design, motion behavior andgraspable tip (in this case a curvilineal conductive top mimics thephysical expression found on some traditional joystick controllers,although this language is not intended to be limiting), this accordingto an embodiment. The soft button or buttons 20 (FIG. 1) are representedas a “soft orb” 30 and control of an actionable object 15 (FIG. 1) orplayer is effected by dragging the soft orb 30 in a 360 degree range ofmotion. A conductive element is fashioned into a stick controller 606comprising a top portion 606A, center portion 606C and bottom portion606B. The top portion 606A may take the shape of a knob, amongst otherdesigns, to furnish grip comfort or remain “knobless”, while the bottomportion 606B acts as a base designed to maintain constant contact withthe soft orb 30—displayed on the touchscreen 10—during a full range ofmotions. The center portion 606C represents the shaft and may exhibit adiameter less than that of the corresponding knob or base. The bottomportion 606B may be any of a number of different shapes, for example: astraight shaft with no bulge or a spheroid design or other bulge.

As understood by those skilled in the art, a joystick controllerattachment in the spirit and scope of this embodiment may requireappropriate electronic translation of movement; since stick-controllergestures can translate to the soft orb 30 on a touchscreen 10 in areverse manner to those gestured. Software can quarterback this“electronic translation” and can be programmed to work in collaborationwith such controllers at the source, such as with the game developers.Where complimentary software is not situated, design modifications canbe implemented (not shown) to include gesture-reversing componentsinnate to the controller. The impetus of any joystick-configurationmeasure is to effect appropriate actuation to all desired movements,whereas an “upward” movement of the joystick, for instance, will resultin “upward” movement of a controllable or actionable object 15 on a userdevice 5.

The conductive stick-controller element 606 is housed in an attachmentbase 604, which facilitates the conductive stick-controller element's606 directional and rotational movements and acts to simulate the “feel”of a traditional stick controller by controlling both stabilization andgesture fluency. The attachment base 604 may be affixed to thetouchscreen 10 by suction, static, removable adhesive backing or anyother appropriate means. A removal tab 608 provides for removal of theattachment base 604 from the touchscreen 10.

FIG. 7 illustrates yet another embodiment of the touchscreen-controllerattachment 702, featuring a customizable navigation-control system. Atouchscreen-controller attachment 702 comprises an attachment orcontroller base 704. The attachment base 704 comprises a plurality ofchannels 710 for receiving conductive elements 106. Thetouchscreen-controller attachment 702 may be oriented on the surface ofthe touchscreen 10 prior to attachment, such that a congruous pluralityof channels 710 align with the totality of the soft buttons 20 (FIG. 1)displayed on the touchscreen 10. Upon attachment, a conductive element106 is inserted into a channel or channels 710 aligned with the softbuttons 20 (FIG. 1) to a point of conductive contact, thereby causingthe soft buttons 20 (FIG. 1) to be actionable from a customizablephysical interface that sits attached to the touchscreen 10. Atransposable configuration apropos to the specific needs of thedisplayed controller geography is used. This may make possible the useof a single, comprehensive touchscreen-controller attachment 702 persoftware event without the need for a prefabricated set or plurality ofstand-alone, touchscreen-controller attachments (each potentially withwidely varying placement of its conductive elements 106) that may berequired by a user, for example, with a library of gaming titles. Suchconfiguration virtue may lead to a more ubiquitous attachment.

By way of illustration and not by way of limitation, thehighly-configurable attachment base 704 may be implemented as a circulardisc, containing a plurality of channels 710 that are arranged in agridded fashion across the attachment base 704. The attachment base 704may be circumscribed by a flexible ring 708. The flexible ring 708 maycontain a lower lip exterior that may be affixed through suction,static, removable adhesive backing or any appropriate means to thetouchscreen 10 (FIG. 1, reference 10) allowing each channel 710 and itsrespective inserted conductive element 106 to oscillate throughdirectional finger, thumb or individual touch contact; thus addingfurther flexibility and customization capabilities to the embodiment'scontrol disposition. In other words, each channel and respectiveconductive element 106 has some flexibility of movement, such that itcan be gestured some small translational distance in any direction inorder to best match up with the touchscreen 10 and the controldisposition of its soft navigational buttons 20, where necessary.

FIG. 8A illustrates a user-device suspension apparatus and relatedcontroller attachment, according to an embodiment. FIG. 8B is across-sectional view illustrating elements of a controller attachment,as it is attached, through an adjustable stem, to a user-devicesuspension apparatus, according to an embodiment.

A suspension device 802 secures a user device 5 and anchors atouchscreen-controller attachment with adjustable stem 808, according toan embodiment. The graspable or handle ends of the suspension device 802may be molded to the contours of the hand, with rubberized grips, tofacilitate gripping and hand comfort. The grippable components may besimilar to those of a traditional video-game console controller andthus, help provide the user with a more familiar tactile experience.“Pocket gamers” seeking a more “clutch-friendly” stead may likely prefera controller that allows for a better grip than the more limited steadof the direct clutch of a user device 5. This may be particularlyevident in such situations where the gamer is not looking directly atthe controller and may be engaged in rapid and dynamic manipulation ofthe soft-button controller; such conditions which can easily cause theuser device 5 to, for example, become momentarily or partially dislodgedfrom the user's grasp.

The suspension device 802 comprises a left-core assembly 804L and aright-core assembly 804R. The left-core assembly 804L and the right-coreassembly 804R may be joined by an adjustable or fixed strip (notillustrated) or fabricated from a single component. The left-coreassembly 804L and the right-core assembly 804R, using laterallypositioned inner tracks or channels (not illustrated), may snap or slideinto position along the respective sides of the user device 5. A purposeof the channels contained in the left-core assembly 804L and theright-core assembly 804R can be to guide and lock the user device 5 atthe centre of the suspension device 802, whilst maintaining fluentviewing of its touchscreen 10. The left-core assembly 804L and theright-core assembly 804R can also accommodate the anchoring of—andfurnish accessibility to—an attached touchscreen-controller attachmentwith adjustable stem 808 or a respective attachment plurality.

The face of the suspension device 802 contains a frontal-slotted groove810 that accommodates the touchscreen-controller attachment withadjustable or interchangeable stem 808; the adjustable orinterchangeable stem substantially permitting varying placement of thebase of the touchscreen controller attachment with adjustable stem 808on the touchscreen 10, for proper control syncing amongst varyingscenarios. The suspension device 802 may contain a plurality offrontal-slotted grooves 810 to accommodate additionaltouchscreen-controller attachments with adjustable stems 808, ifwarranted. The touchscreen-controller attachment with stem 808 may houseone or more conductive elements 106, at the heart of the touch-inputcontroller, that is designed to capacitively engage (such engagement isnot a focus of this illustration) the soft buttons (FIG. 1, reference20) on the touchscreen 10; thereby providing the ability to engagecontrol of an actionable object 15 from a mounted, attachable interface,as it sits attached to a stead-friendly suspension device 802, in thespirit and scope of this discourse.

The suspension device 802 may include one or more threaded-attachmentapertures 814 that can act to suspend accessories such as aneye-friendly magnification device 816; which can readily be positionedto magnify a pocket-sized touchscreen 10 as, exempli gratia, a game oran application is being rendered or a webpage or e-book is being read.The magnification device 816 may cover all or a portion of thetouchscreen 10. The magnification device 816 may be mounted to athreaded attachment aperture 814 by an elbow 818. The elbow 818 may befixed or configured to pivot and/or be manually directed for positioningflexibility. The magnification device 816 may be permanently attached ormay be removable. The components of a suspension device 802 are ideallyscaled to the proportions of the user device 5 to which it is linked.

The adjustable stem 808A (FIG. 8B) may contain a variable locking head820 designed to sit securely into the frontal slotted groove 810. Thefrontal-slotted groove 810 may be incised in varying shapes anddimensions; catering to any variance in design of the locking head 820.The adjustable stem 808A may be constructed of a rigid or yieldingmaterial—the latter tending to retain its position until it is manuallyaltered from its position of rest, to facilitate adjustment capabilitiesof the touchscreen-controller attachment with adjustable stem 808 acrossa wide range of the touchscreen 10. In this way, the conductive elements106 have enhanced positional flexibility under a manually-alteredconfiguration.

FIG. 9 illustrates a touchscreen-controller assembly with a wirelesscomponent; an assembly designed for remote operation, according to anembodiment. A wireless controller 904 is paired to anintermediary-transceiving device 920 using short length radio waves orradio frequency, microwave, infrared communication or any other anwireless technologies, in order to engage control of an actionableobject 15 or player, in the spirit and scope of this discourse. Theintermediary-transceiving device 920 acts as a relay between the softbuttons 20 on a touchscreen 10 and the command signals of a wirelesscontroller 904. The intermediary-transceiving device 920 may beconstructed to draw from an internal power source, such as from theholdings of an internal battery compartment, or from an external sourcesuch as an electrical receptacle outlet, reducing the potential draw onthe user device 5, since the assembly may also be constructed tooptionally use the power source of the user device 5, at the user'sdiscretion.

The intermediary-transceiving device 920 contains a single or pluralityof tethered conductive elements 910 for attachment to the soft buttons20 of a touchscreen 10. The conductive elements 910 may be formed fromany conductive material or combination of materials including, but notlimited to, conductive polymers such as polyaniline, conductive gels,conductive liquids, conductive plastics, metallic or conductive wire, orany material that is conductively (exhibiting conductivity) coated—suchas with the use of treated or dipped foam, thread, or fibers—used alone,in filler compositions or in a series of conductive combinations, asaptly conjoined.

As it is engaged, a wireless controller 904 sends control or navigationcommands to an intermediary-transceiving device 920 for processing,thereby causing the respective conductive elements 910, attached to theintermediary-transceiving device 920, to be engaged accordingly.

The intermediary-transceiving device 920 contains an innate capacitivesource and capacitive manager, thereby delivering the ability to engagea conductive element 910 or plurality of elements 910—by drawing fromthis innate capacitive source and managing its “transfer” to arespective conductive element 910 counterpart; in a manner faithful withthe command gestures of the wireless controller 904. This, without theneed of actual direct finger contact with the conductive elements 910 bythe user. Said another way, the intermediary-transceiving device 920precisely marries the control gestures of the wireless controller 904with the reciprocal physical conductive elements 910, thereby engagingcontrol of an actionable object 15 or player in the exact manner andorder in which the command is sent by the wireless controller. Withemphasis, a system has been delineated where conductive engagement isnot dependent on the user's finger being an electrical conductor andinitiating touch (the control input of a finger) with the touchscreen10. The touchscreen 10 responds to these wirelessly conveyed signals asan innate capacitive source is induced by the intermediary-transceivingdevice 920 and then respectively relayed to the touchscreen 10; just asit would to direct touchscreen 10 contact from the control input of auser's finger (which is, again, no longer requisite due an innatecapacitive source and capacitive manager, as per this embodiment). Ahybrid system utilizing both wired and wireless aspects is illustrated,although use of a hybrid system is not intended to be limiting.

Other embodiments described or addressed herein, or ones that otherwisebecome obvious to a person of skill in the art upon reading thisapplication, may similarly be adapted for wireless use through, forinstance, the introduction of an intermediary-transceiving device 920 toan embodiment or embodiments lacking such a device. Introduction of anintermediary-transceiving device 920 may offer certain embodiments thepotential to become wholly “wire free” since the transceiver cancommunicate directly with both the user device 5 and anyspecially-designed hand-held controller device, or potentially offer theunderpinning of “less wires” in a hybrid system, where available. Insome instances, the addition of a servomechanism or the like may also beintroduced to manage certain gestures or motions, such as with trackballrotation.

FIGS. 10A and 10B illustrate a touchscreen-controller assembly, designedfor remote operation, according to an embodiment. See also FIGS. 3A, 3B.

By way of illustration and not by way of limitation, each tip of theconductive elements 106 may comprise a liquid conductor—fully enclosedin an air-tight, plastic-wrap seal 1002—designed for attachment to (anddetachment from) the soft-buttons 20 of a touchscreen 10 on a userdevice 5, as illustrated in FIG. 10B. Each tip of the conductiveelements 106 may be affixed to the touchscreen 10 by suction, static,removable adhesive backing or any other appropriate means, individuallyor collectively through the strategic attachment of aplurality-containing body such as a matrix (See FIG. 12).

A plurality of air-tight, plastic-wrap seals 1002 (not shown) may beindividually housed in a single touchscreen 10 attachment (not shown);designed to have each of the plurality of air-tight, plastic-wrap seals1002 concurrently (and independently) placed in a contactual manner withits respective soft-button 20 counterpart; collectively comprising theplurality in the spirit and scope of this discourse. Similarly, amountable-attachment with housing designed to host a plurality ofair-tight, plastic-wrap seals 1002 at point-of-contact may be replacedby individual seals 1002 housing a plurality of conductive elements 106arranged in a structured environment, for instance, as conductive dotsin a grid (the arrangement being dependent on the soft-button controllerto which the individual seal 1002 is respectively attached to andintended to actuate), similar to the way they are arranged in FIG. 2.

The material base surrounding and isolating the plurality of air-tight,plastic-wrap seals 1002 (each seal housing one or more conductiveelements 106) may be non-conductive in nature, such as a base materialof plastic or rubber. A plurality of cables 1008 may extend from theremote controller 1010 (not illustrated) and a plurality of air-tight,plastic-wrap seals 1002 may extend from a single cable 1008 (also notillustrated) in alternate embodiments.

The liquid conductor in the air-tight, plastic-wrap seal 1002 may beused in conjunction with a thin length of conductive wire—for examplecopper, but any conductive wire could be used—which has its bare,metallic tip immersed, anchored and wholly sealed in the conductiveliquid located in the air-tight, plastic-wrap seal 1002 in order to forma conductive path and to prevent evaporation. The thin length ofconductive wire, acting as a conductive element, is substantially housedin a connecting cable 1008 that acts as a wire conduit. The wire-endopposite to each tip inserted into an air-tight, plastic-wrap seal 1002is connected to a conductive element counterpart found on the remoteactionable-object controller 1010, thus, upon manipulation of theconductive input/element counterpart, it offers the user of the remoteactionable-object controller 1010 positional and distance flexibilityaway from the touchscreen 10 as an actionable object 15 or player isbeing controlled. With the freedom of distancing the remoteactionable-object controller 1010 from the portable-hardware'stouchscreen 10—made possible through the described implementation of atractable corded length of conductive wire according to anembodiment—the remote actionable-object controller 1010 can take onwhole new design capabilities and more closely (and more broadly) borrowfrom the user experience and physical expression of the larger,console-based game controllers used in home gaming systems. Robustpotential for controller customization exists in its spirit and scope.

Conductive elements 106 in whole or in transmissive part are made of anyelectrically-conductive material or materials, including but not limitedto, conducting polymers such as polyaniline, conductive gels, conductiveliquids, conductive inks, conductive wire and/or any material that isconductively (exhibiting conductivity) coated or dipped—such as with theuse of treated foam, thread, or fibers—used alone, in fillercompositions or in a series of conductive combinations, as aptlyconjoined to ensure a proper conductive path remains present throughout.

This embodiment further illustrates the potential for the combination ofdifferent conductive materials or properties—used in a link—to completea conductive path necessary as a means of controlling an actionableobject 15 or player, in the spirit and scope of this discourse. Theconductive path described herein is not suggestive of limitation orlimitation to the elemental components comprising the path, asdescribed. Therefore, without limitation, any conductive path that isserviceable to the spirit and scope of this discourse may be utilizedfor remote-operating scenarios. A conductive path may be comprised of asingular conductive component throughout or a conjoined plurality ofdistinct components. The noted components are may be designed on asimilar scale to the hardware to which it is attached.

FIG. 11 illustrates a means of expanding the size of atouchscreen-controller attachment 1110 associated with a fixed set ofsoft buttons 20; an initiative that may yield increased user comfort,control precision and tactile deployment, this according to anembodiment. Due to the small size of some touchscreens 10 and thepotentially dense arrangement of soft buttons 20 this small footprintmay yield, amongst other considerations, a user may wish to increase theactual size of the touchscreen-controller attachment 1110 beyond theoriginal soft-button 20 parameters.

The conductive elements 106 are configured to contact the soft buttons20 displayed on a user device 5 on the exterior edges of the softbuttons 20. Through external edge appropriation, the size of thetouchscreen-controller attachment 1110 is thus expanded (the expansionmeasurement of which in some embodiments is dependent on the variable ofthe transverse-perimeter dimensions of the soft buttons 20) in an effortto help improve user comfort, efficacy and control ergonomics, whilestill maintaining full functionality since a conductive path remainspresent in its spirit and scope. The noted components are ideallydesigned for the scale of the hardware to which it is attached.

Data-Entry Attachment

The present invention details an attachment-matrix overlay containing aplurality of conductive elements that are fittingly tethered to both thegraphical soft-buttons at the face of the attachable matrix and therespective hard keys of a specially-designed keyboard, keypad ordata-entry device, through extension from the back of the attachablematrix, in order to facilitate the premise of remote data-entry fortouchscreen based electronics or hardware, as equipped.

It should be noted that in order not to congest the diagrams labelled inFIG. 12, FIG. 13 and FIG. 14, partial quantities of the conductiveelements, the soft-buttons or data-entry buttons and the conductive“hard keys” or “physical keys” associated with a receptive receptivekeyboard, keypad or data-entry device, may be illustrated and suchillustrations are not intended to be limiting. A person skilled in theart (PSITA) should readily ascertain like quantities and compositecharacteristics of each of the groupings in the spirit and scope of thisdiscourse.

FIG. 12 As a preamble to further detailed discussion: graphical soft ordata-entry buttons 54 rendered on a hardware's touchscreen 56 include,but are not limited to, symbols, numbers, alphabetic characters,graphics; also navigation, function, toggle and modifier keys (such asCtrl, Shift, Alt, and so forth); in the spirit and scope of thisdiscourse.

The breadth of possible graphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54is expansive and includes any and all keyboard-based characters forpurposes of this discourse; from both traditional and non-traditionalkeyboards—in both English and non-English languages.

Control of an actionable on-screen object, in this particular embodimentbeing data-entry buttons 54 such as symbols, numbers, alphabeticcharacters, graphics; and navigation, function, toggle and modifierkeys, as a partial listing, are registered using the capacitance-sensingtechnology of the hardware's touchscreen 56 (although this embodiment isnot intended to be limiting and does not preclude adaptation to otherapropos screen-based technologies beyond capacitance that rely on touchinput in the spirit and scope of this discourse) once a user initiatestouch contact with the graphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54via finger input. Human skin has dielectric properties. While finger,thumb and/or stylus contact may be the most common means of capacitancetransfer in the spirit and scope of this discourse, such a reference isnot intended to be limiting in nature.

Referring now to the present invention in more detail, FIG. 12represents an embodiment of a detached touchscreen-controller attachmentmatrix 50 containing a plurality of conductive elements 52; where eachconductive isolate in the plurality (at the face 50-F of the matrix) isdesigned to be contactually affixed to its respective graphicalsoft-button or data-entry button 54 counterpart, in the spirit and scopeof this discourse. The premise of being “contactually affixed” will beparticularized by lineation in FIG. 13, with the introduction ofco-ordinate mapping and further detailed in FIG. 14.

By aptly aligning to a point of contact, the respective conductiveisolates of the conductive elements 52—found at the face 50-F of thetouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50—with their graphicalsoft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 counterparts displayed on thehardware's touchscreen 56, and then extending the conductive path ofsaid conductive isolates to the respective conductive keys K-52 of areceptive keyboard, keypad or data-entry device 60, the capacitancestored, for instance, in the finger of a user, is transferred onto thehardware's touchscreen 56, once user contact with the conductive keysK-52 is initiated, just as if the user was touching the screen directly.

This process thereby permits control of actionable, on-screen symbols,numbers, alphabetic characters, graphics; and navigation, function,toggle and modifier keys, etceteras (data-entry buttons 54), remotelyfrom the touchscreen 56 with the control input of a finger. Only now, anenhanced, more user-friendly data-entry interface exists that can helpbolster comfort, ergonomics, productivity and simplicity of use, whileconcurrently improving input efficacy due to the implementation of amore precise control structure, a greater familiarity of association totraditional data-entry based desktop and laptop input mechanisms andtactile touch discovery and orientation, amongst other potentialbetterments. This can significantly enhance the data-entry experienceover the use of traditional touchscreen hardware in its native,attachmentless environment.

Each of the individual conductive elements 52, or a conductive isolatein the singular, of the plurality or series possesses conductive-pathextension capabilities from the back 50-B or tethered-side of atouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50. One possible means ofextension (not illustrated), amongst others, is achieved byincorporating, through fusion or any other suitable manner faithful to aconductive path, a conductive length of wire 58 into each of therespective conductive elements 52 at the back 50-B or tethered-side of atouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50—on one end—with care toensure a conductive path remains present throughout, in the spirit andscope of this discourse. In preparation to trigger its controlfunctionality, the touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 is thenattached to the hardware's touchscreen 56, ensuring contactualconsistency with the graphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54.Each embedded conductive isolate remains wholly transmissive between thefront and back of the matrix.

Conversely, the opposite end of the conductive length of wire 58 isrespectively attached to the reciprocal conductive key or plurality ofkeys K-52 (a plurality is stated here as an acknowledgement for thedistinction of toggle mode, which is discussed later in this filing);found on a receptive keyboard, keypad or data-entry device 60, in thespirit and scope of this discourse. The shape of the matrix 50 can bemanipulated to match up with variously sized soft keys and touchscreens,for example by having the elements of the matrix 50 easily snap togetherand apart in various configurations or having a pliable matrix thatappropriately maintains its shape until manipulated by a user, shoulddesign permit. Similarly, single conductive elements 52 may bemanipulated individually to accommodate differences in the charactersdisplayed on a touch screen, should design permit, although any examplescited for matrix manipulation are not suggestive of limitation.

The touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 and its plurality ofconductive elements 52 are designed to be attached or affixed to thehardware's touchscreen 56 by any manner of attachment including, but notlimited to, suction, static, removable adhesive backing, through anaffiliation with a flexible, hardware-friendly sleeve or any attachmentguide for purposes suited thereof. The touchscreen-controller attachmentmatrix 50 may contain an exteriorly protruding lip 62 that can be usedfor convenient detachment of the touchscreen-controller attachmentmatrix 50 from the hardware's touchscreen 56.

The conductive elements 52, or any single conductive isolate of theplurality, in the spirit and scope of this discourse, can be made of anyelectrically-conductive material or combination of conductive materialsas aptly conjoined, in whole, in transmissive part or in a series,including but not limited to, conducting polymers such as polyaniline,conductive gels, conductive liquids, conductive inks, conductive wireand/or any material that is conductively (exhibiting conductivity)dipped or coated—such as with the use of treated foam, thread, or fibersor related filler compositions, to which ensuring a proper conductivepath remains present throughout.

The conductive material comprising a single conductive element 52 orconductive isolate can differ from others in the plurality, but in thisembodiment, remains consistent in order to streamline the manufacturingprocess and contribute to economies-of-scale advantages. The conductiveelements 52 may be referred to in its singular form, as it has above:notably referencing a conductive isolate equivalent or an individualconductive element, bearing root from its plural counterpart and suchsingular or plurality references will be understood by those skilled inthe art in the context they were intended, in the spirit and scope ofthis discourse.

Typically, the conductive elements 52 are individually insulated fromeach other to prevent contact with, and “conductive bleed” or“capacitive bleed” from, competing conductive elements 52; unlessspecial-case operating scenarios require an instance of capacitivebleed. “Capacitive bleed” can result from improper shielding of theindividual conductive isolates or related conductive apparatus. Since aplurality of conductive lengths of wire 58 (each constituting aninstance of conductive elements 52) may exist contactually in cableconduit housing, this potential event underscores why shielding isespecially important; to ensure intended data-entry actions result asanticipated.

Note that while the conductive elements 52 can be concurrently attachedto the hardware's touchscreen 56 by direct placement of thetouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50, as described herein, eachindividual conductive element 52 or conductive isolate can also bedesigned to be individually or separately attached/detached (withoutbeing conjoined to a stand-alone, touchscreen-controller attachmentmatrix 50 overlay) to/from the hardware's touchscreen 56, should it bedesired. The language found in this description, and others situated inthis filing, is not intended to be limiting.

Ideally, the conductive elements 52 and correspondingtouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 are dimensionallyarticulated and proportionate to the hardware ensemble they are designedfor. The touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 is sufficientlywide and long to ensure the respective conductive elements 52 at itsface 50-F are conductively aligned with the graphical soft-buttons ordata-entry buttons 54, but not overly wide and long to unnecessarilyblock or encroach germane screen area or, similarly, skew any necessarycontactual-alignment requirements. Embodiments and practical applicationcan greatly diverge from the drawings in this and other figures. Amatrix square containing a singular conductive isolate can vary greatlyin dimension from a competing matrix square of a conductive isolate andstandardization of squares and square dimension across a matrix is notrequisite.

The conductive elements 52 conductively aligned with the graphicalsoft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54, are attached to the hardware'stouchscreen 56 with care, ensuring each conductive isolate of theconductive elements 52 is not contactually aligned on a plurality ofgraphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 concurrently and thatthe graphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 remain directlyactionable only from its intended conductive key or keys K-52, assummoned in the task of data-entry, unless otherwise required.

Ensembles of the present invention and any various embodiments listedwill vary in degree of construction complexity. Construction can alsodiffer to accommodate left-and-right handed preferences. Subjects,respective components and any sub-components found in FIG. 12 (and thefiling in its entirety) may not be shown to exact specification orscale.

The user experience may be further improved when the disclosed premiseof remote data entry is married, synergistically, to such technologiesas: “Component AV Cables”, that allow, exempli gratia, acompatibly-equipped smart phone to be connected—and to have its screenoutput transferred—to televisions fitted with component video inputs orsimilar linking technologies. Coupling with such technologies may createan environment that even more profoundly liberates the texting ordata-entry experience for users of touchscreen 56 hardware when comparedto use in a native environment. Business travellers may find thiscoupling especially liberating.

Referring now to FIG. 13 in more detail, in an embodiment, a two-sidedview of a touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 is shown (from avantage of its face 50-F and back 50-B), with its set of uninterruptedconductive paths of conductive elements 52; each of which transversesthe entire thickness of the matrix. For clarification purposes regardingcorrect application of the face 50-F of the touchscreen-controllerattachment matrix 50, a subset of a traditional QWERTY-based arrangementof graphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 is depicted(non-toggle mode) to suggest intended conductive lineation of the face50-F of the matrix to the hardware's touchscreen 56, upon attachment.

Then, in order to more clearly depict transitional lineation, the back50-B of the corresponding touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 isalso produced in FIG. 13 to show a completed conductive path from aninput end to an output end, amongst the illustrated parts, in the spiritand scope of this discourse. The back is shown from a top-downorientation, as if looking down at the touchscreen-controller attachmentmatrix 50, with the front 50-F vantage naturally obstructed from viewupon matrix application in practice (hence, the inventor has chosen aside-by-side illustrative manner here). The back 50-B of thecorresponding touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 shows anextension of its conductive elements 52 to the conductive keys K-52 (inthis case, 2 keys, the actionable letters “A” and “B”, respectively,representing only a constituent view of the full set of keys ordinarilypresent in a QWERTY design) of a receptive keyboard, keypad ordata-entry device 60. Said differently, the conductive elements 52 foundat the back 50-B of the corresponding touchscreen-controller attachmentmatrix 50 are conductively married, to an appropriate input counterpart,by extension via conductive lengths of wire 58 (as a possible, but notan exclusive means of extension) to the corresponding conductive keysK-52 (key-based conductive elements 52), as situated on a receptivekeyboard, keypad or data-entry device 60. Again, the actionable letters“A” and “B” are only a partial representation of the actionable physicalkeys typically available in a traditional QWERTY environment (a subsetof a toggle environment) and the array and disposition of both thegraphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 and conductive keys K-52displayed in practice may differ widely from this illustration and arenot suggestive of limitation.

The conductive element 52 individually assigned and aptly attached (viaa conductive isolate found at the face 50-F of thetouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50) to the “A” key of thegraphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 found on the hardware'stouchscreen 56, will then see said conductive isolate assigned, whilemaintaining an inherent conductive path, from the back 50-B of thecorresponding touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50, to the “A”key found on the specially designed keyboard comprising a plurality ofconductive keys K-52—composed of conductive elements 52—in the spiritand scope of this invention.

To illustrate contactual placement of a single conductive isolate(comprising the conductive elements 52) found at the face 50-F of thetouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50, with the respectivegraphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 found on the hardware'stouchscreen 56, an X,Y grid is shown adjacent to both thetouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 (dual sides) and graphicalsoft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54, to demonstrate correct contactualpositioning that is serviceable to this embodiment. The “A” key of thegraphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54, for example, is locatedat position X1, Y2 and noted. The respective “A” key position at thenoted position X1, Y2 on the matrix seeks contactual overlay—uponattachment of the touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 at itsface—with its data-entry button 54 counterpart. Successful contactualplacement of the touchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 with thegraphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54, in the spirit and scopeof this discourse, will see each set of the identical X,Y coordinates inthe control structure (a conductive path) matched in their totality uponmatrix overlay. A typical matrix can have some of its individualconductive isolates vary in size, positioning and structure (versus theidentical grid-composition of the matrix illustrated here) to moreclosely reflect the graphical renderings on the hardware's touchscreen56 to which it marries.

Similarly, the conductive elements 52 assigned and aptly attached (via aconductive isolate found at the face 50-F of the touchscreen-controllerattachment matrix 50 at position X5,Y1) to the “B” key of the graphicalsoft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 (at position X5,Y1) found on thehardware's touchscreen 56, will then see said conductive isolatesimilarly assigned, ensuring a conductive path remains present, to the“B” key found on the specially designed keyboard, keypad or data-entrydevice comprising conductive keys K-52 (composed of conductive elements52) from a rear-modal matrix extension (at position X5,Y1), in thespirit and scope of this discourse. And so on, preferably until allavailable graphical soft-buttons or soft data-entry buttons 54 of agiven application (in both toggle and non-toggle mode on a hardware'stouchscreen 56) are properly accounted for and conductively married totheir respective conductive keys K-52 on a receptive keyboard, keypad ordata-entry device 60.

Illustrations shown in FIG. 13, and throughout all diagrams, are notnecessarily to scale and can vary in appearance in the spirit and scopeof the present invention. A person skilled in the art (PSITA) may alsoseek referral to FIG. 12 and other embodiments to appreciate the broadspirit and scope of this embodiment. Disclosures and renderings hereinare not intended to be limiting.

FIG. 14 details the premise of toggle mode, with a simple, hypotheticalillustration of a plurality of graphical soft-buttons or data-entrybuttons 54 that interchangeably share a fixed location on a touchscreen(and affixed matrix), as various character sets are deployed in a toggleon a touchscreen 56. In this hypothetical example, and disclosedembodiment, the graphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 “K” and“]” share the same fixed screen location, but not concurrently, each ofthese keys becomes enlisted to a shared fixed screen location only whenactuated by a toggle; in which both keys are typically renderedindependently, as part of a set of touchscreen keys or characters in anaggregate set or rendering. Toggle mode, in the spirit and scope of thisdiscourse, may be necessary when a touchscreen's geography is limited insize (such as with physical constraints instanced in a mobileenvironment). It would, for example, not usually be either efficient orpractical for pocket-sized, Internet-enabled smart phones to fit theentire QWERTY-based keyboard in a single, graphical-rendering entiretyon its limited touchscreen size. Toggle mode makes, exempli gratia, theQWERTY-load more manageable. Arrangements and character sets of thegraphical soft-buttons or data-entry buttons 54 displayed in practicemay vary from those depicted in this hypothetical example (andelsewhere) and merely serve as a guide to understanding the premise oftoggle mode.

Where a toggle is effected for graphical soft-buttons or data-entrybuttons 54 that share a fixed geography or position (toggle area) on thehardware's touchscreen 56, a conductive length of wire 58 is fused (orconductively attached in any appropriate manner) to the conductiveisolate at the matrix point sharing a toggle area 70 in contactualplacement. An additional conductive length of wire 58 sharing a togglearea is then attached, either directly at the same matrix point of theconductive isolate sharing a toggle area 70 (not shown) or along thecorded length of an established conductive length of wire 58 (shown inphantom as a dashed line), careful to ensure a conductive path remainsthroughout, in the spirit and scope of this invention.

The respective conductive lengths of wires used in a toggle situationdescribed above, will, at the corded lengths opposite thetouchscreen-controller attachment matrix 50 fusion and/or amalgamationpoints (and at each respective conductive isolate comprising the matrixat full employment) be attached to the respective conductive keys K-52on a receptive keyboard, keypad or data-entry device 60 in order tofacilitate keyboard-based text or data entry, remotely from atouchscreen 56. The fusion point is the point where the wire meets theattachment matrix 50 and the amalgamation point is the point where thewires from the different conductive keys K-52 are joined, although insome operating scenarios, no amalgamation point exists because the wiresmay see direct contact with the attachment matrix 50 at the conductiveisolate. A person skilled in the art (PSITA) may also seek referral toFIG. 12 and other embodiments to appreciate the spirit and scope of thisdiscourse.

FIG. 15 illustrates three distinct character sets or “keyboards”presented on a touchscreen 10; each of which rely on a “toggle” foractivation—the premise of “toggle” being requisite for devices subjectto space limitations. In this embodiment, a QWERTY keyboard 1501 isdisplayed. With a QWERTY allocation encompassing nearly the entiretouchscreen 10 as shown, there is not sufficient room for additionalsets of numbers or special characters to be displayed concurrently. Thesolution to such space constraint is the toggle.

The upper-toggle button 1503 in the third frame 1507, for instance,changes the displayed keys to a “numerical-based set” 1505 (secondframe), whilst the lower toggle button 1503 in the same frame revertsback to the QWERTY set. To engage additional punctuation and the specialcharacters set of 1507, the user would simply touch the upper-togglebutton 1503 in the second frame 1505; allowing a user to refresh to anew character set in the same, fixed space. Both useful and germane tothe small footprint.

The letter “A” 1509 and dash “-” 1511 share a location, or toggle area,on the touchscreen 10. Thus, on the data-entry device, both the “A” and“-” keys are conductively married to the matrix point adjoining thisshared area of the touchscreen 10, allowing the data-entry device to beused in similar fashion to a desktop environment in attribute to thepresent invention. A “toggle” need not exclusively be triggered bycontact with a “toggle character” and instead a data-entry device canalso contain a “toggle button” or set of “toggle buttons” that cue therespective character sets automatically when a “toggle button” istouched, then depressed (if, like in a previous embodiment, the key isspring mounted or requires downward pressure to be contactually engaged)or otherwise receives touch input. Furthermore, a receptive keyboard,keypad or data-entry device 60 can be designed to automatically shuttlebetween toggle sets, when, for instance, a button on the data-entrydevice is pressed that does not have its corresponding soft keycurrently displayed on the touchscreen 10, with a keystroke theninstantly rendered in the same action through a device processor. Thedata-entry device may default back to a set of characters such as theQWERTY set or remain static to the character set of the first keystrokeentered after a “toggle button” has been initialized.

Amongst a list of functional electronics, the keyboard may containmemory storage, a specially designed matrix attachment with OCRcapability, wireless hardware for pairing with a user device 5, aminiature LCD with, amongst other means, message storage and draftoutput capability and a device processor powering this improvedfunctionality. Users may also be afforded the option to customize togglebehaviour, amongst other functionality provided with the optionalbuilt-in electronics. Such discourse is not intended as a limitation onthe breadth and scope of the present invention.

The conductive data-entry attachment and ensemble, like its conductiveactionable-object controller counterpart, can leverage the use of bothhaptic and wireless technologies to empower functionality. Hapticinclusion may prove useful, for example, if a person was to use akeyboard, keypad or data-entry device, in the spirit and scope of thisdiscourse, for game play, such as with a text-based adventure orrole-playing game.

For purposes of disclosure, touchscreen based hardware—and references toa hardware's touchscreen—include any and all touchscreen-basedtechnologies within the spirit and scope of this discourse, premised onthe ability for adaptation beyond those that are capacitive andcapacitance governed. The present invention may, for example, requirecertain modifications and engineering protocol to actualizefunctionality for non-capacitive based touchscreens—such as those withresistive touchscreen technologies that sense contactual pressuredifferently than a capactive touchscreen. For instance, a spring-mountedtouch element requiring downward pressure to effect point-of-contactwith a touchscreen display vs. an operating scenario of perpetualtouch-element contact with a touchscreen display may be an underlyingmodificative transition. For any touchscreen technology that relies onan electric signal to determine the location of touch, embodimentsdisclosed herein may function as described without substantialmodification and those skilled in the art will appreciate anymodificative qualifiers that may be necessary regarding the type ofinput electrical signal.

For touchscreen technologies relying on physical contact with/pressurechange on a touchscreen 10, such as with resistive, surface acousticwave, infrared, optical imaging, dispersive signal technology andacoustic pulse recognition touchscreens, modification may generally beneeded for remote input embodiments to convert the conducted electricalsignal into a point of pressure on the touchscreen 10. Notwithstandingany disclosed embodiments that can result in a point of pressure beingcreated on a touchscreen 10 and the possibility fortrans-interoperability between differing touchscreen technologies thatthis represents, this can additionally be accomplished, for example, bycoupling actuators to the conductive elements; which exert pressure onthe touchscreen 10 when a signal is received due to touch input ormanipulation of the opposing end or the input end of the conductor in aconductive path. A intermediary-transceiver device could also be readilydesigned to convert input manipulation into point-of-pressure contact ona touchscreen 10 to cater to demands of those touchscreens. An innatecapacitive source and manager could, for example, be replaced by asystem of mechanical relays of “contactual pistons”. Embodiments aredisposed to modification and combination.

While the noted embodiments and accompanying discourse and illustrationsof the invention disclosed herein can enable a person skilled in the art(PSITA) to make and use the invention in its detailed exemplaryembodiments, a skilled artisan will understand and appreciate theactuality of variations, modifications, combinations, atypicalimplementations, improvements and equivalents of any of the specificembodiments, methods, illustrations and examples listed herein.

While the present invention has been described with reference to suchnoted embodiments, methods, illustrations and examples, it is understoodby a skilled artisan that the invention is not limited to any of thedisclosed embodiments, methods, illustrations and examples, but by allembodiments, methods, illustrations and examples within the spirit andscope of the invention. The scope of the following claims, and theprinciples and novel features, amongst the discourse herein, is to beaccorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass allmodifications, combinations, improvements and equivalent structures andfunctions.

Any particular terminology describing certain features or aspects of theinvention is not suggestive of language restricted to any specificcharacteristics, features, or aspects of the invention with which thatterminology is associated. Furthermore, any reference to claim elementsin the singular, for example, using the articles “a,” “an,” or “the,” isnot to be construed as limiting the element to the singular.

1. A touchscreen controller attachment device, comprising: one or moreinput ends; one or more output ends; wherein each input end iscommunicatively connected with an output end; wherein the output endsare configured to be affixed in a position in contact with or in closeproximity to a touchscreen; wherein the output ends comprise actuatingelements configured to activate the touchscreen when one or more of theinput ends is manipulated and the output ends are in the position. 2.The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 1, furthercomprising a base housing one or more of the output ends, wherein thebase is affixable to the touchscreen and, when affixed to thetouchscreen, positions the housed output ends in contact with or inclose proximity to the touchscreen.
 3. The touchscreen controllerattachment device of claim 2, wherein the base is removably attachableto the touchscreen.
 4. The touchscreen controller attachment device ofclaim 2, wherein the base comprises a plurality of channels, and whereineach of the plurality of channels is shaped and adapted to house aremovable output end.
 5. The touchscreen controller attachment device ofclaim 2, further comprising: at least one vibration motor in hapticassociation with the one or more input ends, wherein the at least onevibration motor provides haptic feedback when activated.
 6. Thetouchscreen controller attachment device of claim 5, wherein one or moreof the one or more input ends are housed in a handheld controller, andwherein the haptic feedback is provided though the handheld controller.7. The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 5, wherein thehaptic feedback is provided in response to control of anactionable-object as actuated by control signals input through the inputends.
 8. The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 1,wherein one or more of the actuating elements are conductive elements.9. The touchscreen controller device of claim 8, wherein one or more ofthe input ends comprise conductive elements.
 10. The touchscreencontroller attachment device of claim 1, wherein each pair of input andoutput ends are opposite ends of a unitary element.
 11. The touchscreencontroller attachment device of claim 10, further comprising: at leastone spring chamber extending through the base, the at least one springchamber containing the unitary element; and a spring located within theat least one spring chamber, wherein the spring enters an activeposition upon application of pressure on the input end of the unitaryelement, and wherein the spring enters a resting position upondeapplication of pressure on the input end of the unitary element,wherein the output end of the element is contactable to the touchscreenwhen the spring is in the active position and in the resting position isnot in contact with the touchscreen.
 12. The touchscreen controllerattachment device of claim 10, wherein: the input end of the unitaryelement protrudes from the base and the base permits 360 degree movementof the input and output ends of the unitary element for joystickoperation.
 13. The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 1,wherein the input ends are remote from the output ends and connected tothe output ends by wire, wirelessly, or both.
 14. The touchscreencontroller attachment device of claim 13, wherein two or more of theinput ends are configured in a fixed position with respect to oneanother.
 15. The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 13,further comprising: at least one conductive cable, the at least oneconductive cable having a first end and a second end, wherein the firstend is communicatively coupled to one of the input ends, and wherein thesecond end is communicatively coupled to one of the output ends.
 16. Thetouchscreen controller attachment device of claim 14, furthercomprising: a remote base housing the two or more input ends, atransceiver communicatively coupled wirelessly with the remote base; andat least one conductive connector, the at least one conductive connectorhaving a first end and a second end, where the first end iscommunicatively coupled with the transceiver, and wherein the second endis communicatively coupled with one or more of the output ends.
 17. Thetouchscreen controller attachment device of claim 1, wherein the one ormore output ends are contactually alignable with at least a portion of asoft button displayed on the touchscreen.
 18. The touchscreen controllerattachment device of claim 17, wherein each pair of input and outputends are opposite ends of a unitary element, and wherein at least one ofthe one or more input ends extends beyond the outer border of the softbutton with which a corresponding output end is contactually aligned,thereby extending the area which can be contacted to activate the softbutton.
 19. The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 1,wherein at least one of the one or more output ends contacts thetouchscreen upon an application of pressure on the input end.
 20. Thetouchscreen controller attachment device of claim 1, further comprising:a suspension device shaped and adapted to house a touchscreen device; anadjustable stem member having a first end and a second end; and at leastone slotted groove shaped and adapted to house the first end of theadjustable stem member, wherein the second end is attachable to anattachment device.
 21. The touchscreen controller attachment device ofclaim 20, wherein the attachment device is at least one of amagnification device and a base housing one or more of the output ends,wherein the base is affixable to the touchscreen and, when affixed tothe touchscreen, positions the housed output ends in contact with or inclose proximity to the touchscreen.
 22. A touchscreen controller device,comprising one or more input ends configured to communicate wirelesslywith a remote touchscreen device, with the assistance of an intermediarytransceiver device configured to wirelessly bridge the input ends andthe remote touchscreen device or by direct pairing, as a method tocontrol an actionable-object displayed on a touchscreen of thetouchscreen device.
 23. A data entry attachment device, comprising thetouchscreen controller attachment device of claim 1, wherein one or moreof the actuating elements are conductive elements and one or more of theinput ends are conductive keys of a data entry controller, and whereineach conductive key is communicatively coupled to at least one of theplurality of conductive elements via one or more conductive wires. 24.The touchscreen controller attachment of claim 1, wherein one or more ofthe input ends are input keys of a data entry controller and wherein atleast one of the actuating elements is communicatively connected with atleast two input keys, whereby activation of either input key activatesthe coupled actuating element.
 25. A touchscreen device controllersystem, comprising the touchscreen controller attachment device of claim11 and further comprising an AV cable output configured to connect to atouchscreen device, thereby allowing touchscreen device output to beviewed on a television screen and freeing both touchscreen device inputand output from the constraints of the touchscreen device.
 26. Atouchscreen device controller system, comprising the touchscreencontroller attachment device of claim 1 and further comprising an AVcable output configured to connect to a touchscreen device, therebyallowing touchscreen device output to be viewed on a television screen.27. The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 5, furthercomprising a user device or transceiver that communicates hapticdirectives to the at least one vibration motor.
 28. The touchscreencontroller attachment device of claim 1, wherein one or more of theactuating elements exert pressure on the touchscreen when activated. 29.The touchscreen controller device of claim 16, wherein the transceivercomprises an innate capacitive source and capacitive manager and whereinone or more of the output ends are conductive elements, whereby the oneor more conductive element output ends can be engaged without directuser contact via a conductive path by drawing from the innate capacitivesource.
 30. The touchscreen controller attachment device of claim 2,wherein the actuating elements are further configured to control anactionable-object on the touchscreen by manipulation of one or more ofthe input ends.